Nothing New,” which the American poet wrote in 1918, is published for the first time in The New Yorker’s Anniversary Issue.
A recently discovered poem, written in 1918 and published for the first time in The New Yorker’s Anniversary Issue.
ROBERT Frost has been discovering America all his life. He has also been discovering the world; and since he is a really wise poet, the one thing has been the same thing as the other. He is more ...
The sesquicentennial of Robert Frost, the American poet born on March 26 1874, seems a good moment to remind ourselves that ...
But ironically, Robert Frost was 40 years old, with his life nearly half over, before the people of the U.S. recognized him as a poet, and then they learned it from the British. For those 40 years ...
From a 1915 letter to English poet Edward Thomas explaining why Americans ... From the first volume of Frost’s letters, just released by Harvard. Despite domestic and international opposition ...
When you think of poetry, you may think of Robert Frost, Emily Dickenson, or Maya Angelou. While those poets laid much of the ...
Amanda Gorman was just 22 when her inaugural poem, “The Hill We Climb”, read ... A sharp wind and the glare of light on the snow rescued Robert Frost, the first to start the tradition at ...
Massachusetts was one of only three states without a poet laureate, according to the Library of Congress, joined by New ...